Sisnaajiní - Blanca Peak Sacred Mountain of the East





The Dawn Mountain. Sisnaajiní (Blanca Peak) marks the Eastern boarder of the traditional Navajo homeland. It is the mountain of Spring, new life, and the rising sun.

JTSM visited Blanca Peak on 5/23/09 - 5/25/09 and again on 7/11/09.



Journey to Tsoodził (Mt Taylor Sacred Mountain of the South)





With the rugged beauty of Blanca Peak fresh in our memory, Journey to the Sacred Mountains continued to the sacred mountain of the south. Mt Taylor holds physical, cultural, and spiritual significance for many tribes of the southwest including Acoma, Laguna, Zuni, Navajo, and Hopi. Known as Tsoodził to the Navajo, traditional teachings describe that Mt Taylor is fastened to the earth with a stone knife. The mountain represents summer, the turquoise stone, and is home to turquoise boy and turquoise girl. In recent news, Mt Taylor has been designated as Traditional Cultural Property by the New Mexico Cultural Properties review Committee.

We visited Mt Taylor August 1 - 2, 2009.





Journey to Dook’o’oosłíí - The San Francisco Peaks





Named The San Francisco Peaks by 17th century Franciscan missionaries, Dook’o’oosłíí is the Navajo Sacred Mountain that marks the western boarder of traditional Navajo homeland. Represented by the color yellow, Navajo describe that Dook’o’oosłíí is representative of adulthood and associated with Autumn. Secured to the earth by a sun beam and containing abalone shell inside, it is the home of Haashch’éélt’i’í Talking God, Naada’algaii ‘Ashkii White Corn Boy, and Naadá ‘Altsoii ‘At’ééd Yellow Corn Girl. It has a female attribute and said to be covered with yellow clouds mixed with evening twilight.

In western terms, "The Peaks" are volcanic in origin, and stand a mile above the surrounding southwestern edge of the Colorado Plateau. A series of 6 peaks standing above 11,000 feet border the volcanic caldera that makes up the Inner Basin. Humphreys Peak stands at 12,366 feet and marks the highest point in Arizona. The four highest individual peaks in Arizona are contained within the range.

At least 13 Native American tribes describe sacred connections to these mountains. Navajo, Hopi, Zuni, Apache, Acoma, Southern Paiute, Havasupai, Hualapai, Yavapai, and Mojave are among the indigenous people who have ancestral ties to these sacred peaks which have provided life sustaining water, game, timber, medicinal plants, and spiritual context throughout their history.

In modern times, conflicts and controversy have been ongoing as industrial and recreational interests have pursued development that has been seen as contrary to the spiritual nature of these sacred mountains. Journey to the Sacred Mountains has no direct connection or involvement in these disputes, as a cultural awareness project, we endeavored to approach these sacred peaks with the utmost respect and reverence for their sacred significance.


Our journey took us to Dook’o’oosłíí on Saturday October 17, 2009.


Photos from the trip can be seen here.